Nothing lasts for ever, except our saying so: ‘Out, out, brief candle!’ Judging by the remains of flowers in their graves, even Neanderthal men cried over their short ‘hour upon the stage’, and this has to explain why the combination of an eleventh-century Persian jotter of secret verse that refuted the certainties of Islam and a nineteenth-century English gentleman who rejected the conformities demanded by Victorian society has proved the most successful literary pairing in history. Weight by weight, apparently, Edward FitzGerald’s ‘rendering’ – as he put it – of the quatrains of Omar Khayyam into English has spawned more phrases in the language than the Bible and Shakespeare together.